Swedenborg and Life Recap: End Times and Jesus Christ – 7/25/16

Watch full episode here!

Is the apocalypse nigh? The world completely failed to end on May 21st, 2011, on Y2K, or even at the 2012 “Mayan Apocalypse,” yet many still believe that the end times will come within our lifetime. You can see this idea influencing politics and behavior, even today. Where did they get that idea from anyway?

In this episode, host Curtis Childs and featured guests explore what eighteenth-century Christian mystic and philosopher Emanuel Swedenborg had to say about Jesus’s predictions on the end times as written in the Bible—specifically, in chapter 24 of the book of Matthew. What could these Bible passages mean for humanity?

The Theological Heart Attack

End times predictions have been around for a long time, even predating Christianity. Author Richard Smoley provides a quick history of the end of the world, along with special insight into Jesus’s predictions as listed in the gospels.

According to Swedenborg, Jesus wasn’t predicting the end of the world but the end of the Christian church. In order to understand what that means, it’s helpful to first understand that Swedenborg uses the word “church” to mean a level of consciousness that connects the Earth to God.

Swedenborg wrote about the human race functioning as one body—including both people on earth and people in heaven—with the church as its heart and lungs. Again, when Swedenborg says “church,” he’s not talking about a specific religion, denomination, or building; he’s talking about all of the people on earth who have a spiritual connection to the Divine. So, if that group is in trouble, the entire human race is in danger of losing its connection to the higher spiritual realms.

When the church on earth dies, the lower heavens also disintegrate. The reason is that the heavens consist of people from the world. When there is nothing good left in the human heart and no truth from the Word, the heavens are flooded with evils that rise up; they are choked by them as by the waters of the Styx. Nevertheless the Lord hides [good spirits] somewhere else and preserves them till the day of the Last Judgment, then lifts them into a new heaven. (True Christianity §119:3)

When you take this definition of the church and put it next to Jesus’s description of the end times in Matthew 24, what the Bible is describing in Swedenborgian terms is a theological heart attack that would affect all of humanity.

To help us better understand the dynamics at work, Dr. Edward Higgins discusses how heart attacks affect the human body physically. He makes the point that a heart attack is something that builds up over time. The final event may seem sudden, but internally there’s a long buildup with occasional warning signs. So, the heart attack of the church could take a very long time—it may even have started already!

When we go back to the literal text of the Bible and look at its spiritual correspondences, we see references to arguments about truth and to battles between groups of the faithful.

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Inner meaning

Bible verse

Bible verse

Inner meaning

People within the church weren’t able to see what was happening, and we must be careful not to be blind to this in ourselves. In Swedenborg’s experiences of the spiritual world, he encountered many people who pretended to be faithful and loving on earth but who were in fact filled with hatred for others—and even for Jesus.

But those persisting to the end will be saved symbolizes the salvation of people who love their neighbor. Those persisting to the end means those who do not let themselves be led astray, who do not give way in times of trial. (Secrets of Heaven §3488:7)

Safe Zones

The core of this message is that in order to survive periods of conflict, we need to stay in a loving mindset. Why couldn’t Jesus just say that? It turns out that there’s a good reason.

The Lord spoke this way in order to keep people from understanding his words, for fear they would profane them. If they had understood the message when the church was spiritually devastated . . . they would have profaned it. (Secrets of Heaven §3898:2)

What is profanation? Swedenborg defines it as first understanding, accepting, and living divine truth and then rejecting it. Those who profane truth use what they’ve learned for their personal benefit. They can then twist true ideas to deceive others, leading good people astray.

People who profane truth live constantly with a source of torment, according to the magnitude of their profanation. Because of this, the Lord takes the greatest care to prevent divine goodness and truth from being profaned. With people who cannot help profaning what is true and good his main method is to keep them as far as possible from acknowledging and believing in it. Again, the only people who can profane something are those who once acknowledged and believed it. (Secrets of Heaven §3398:2)

At this point in Jesus’s prediction for the end times, he issues a series of warnings that might seem baffling. He says that the end times will be especially bad for women who are pregnant or nursing and that it will be especially bad for everyone if it happens in winter or on the Sabbath. What does that mean?

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Bible verse

Inner meaning

Jesus also warns against false prophets, a claim that has been made about many people throughout history. How do we identify who is telling the truth and who isn’t? In Swedenborg’s view, what matters most isn’t what you claim to believe but how you choose to act. Is what a person does consistent with what Jesus taught and did?

The Lord’s Coming will not be his literal reappearance in the world but his presence in every individual. This coming takes place every time the gospel is preached, every time someone thinks about something holy. (Secrets of Heaven §3900:9)

Swedenborg refers to the Bible as the Word, but in his writings he makes it clear that the Word also means spiritual truths that go beyond what is written:

The Word of the Lord in itself is dead, for it is only a letter; but in the person reading it, it is vivified by the Lord in the measure of each one’s ability to understand and perceive, with which he or she is gifted by the Lord. So it is alive in the measure of the life of the person reading it, for which reason there is countless variety. These words were written in the presence of angels. (Spiritual Experiences§1877)

Swedenborg also comments on the Rapture as famously depicted in the Left Behind book series. The series imagines a world where the Rapture comes, the faithful vanish suddenly as they’re taken up to heaven, and everybody else is . . . left behind. The events in the series are based in part on the words of Matthew 24:40–41, which Swedenborg explains below.

Two will then be in the field; one will be taken and one left symbolizes people in the church devoted to goodness and people in the church devoted to evil. Those devoted to goodness will be saved, and those devoted to evil will be damned . . . Two grinding in the mill; one will be taken and one left means that people in the church who focus on truth (or desire truth) for good reasons will be saved, while people in the church who focus on truth (or desire truth) for bad reasons will be damned. (Secrets of Heaven §4334:8, 9)

It should be noted here that in Swedenborg’s theology, to be “damned” means a state that people choose for themselves based on the things they love; it does not mean eternal punishment. But the point is that you can’t really tell what a person’s internal state is like by looking at them.

All this may seem bleak, but there is hope . . .

The Benefits of an Oil Supply

Jesus is not the fire and brimstone judge that some people depict. He is love, and he wants us to be ready for the Second Coming. He left instructions in the form of a parable that immediately follows the dire predictions in Matthew 24, popularly known as the parable of the ten young women. The story goes like this: Ten young women were getting ready to participate in a wedding celebration. Five of them brought oil for their lamps, while the other five brought lamps without enough oil and were forced to run out to buy more at the last minute. The five unprepared women ended up missing the celebration entirely, while the five who brought oil went to join in. Curtis uses two replica oil lamps to demonstrate the spiritual principle involved: the lamps represent our faith, and the oil is love. Without love, we can have no true faith. (Don’t miss the coming of the Lord!)

The moral of the story is that even when there’s hatred, when times are difficult, or when we might experience doubt, we have to consciously embrace love.

After the parable, you can take some time to meditate on that imagery and your own understanding of charity in hard times.

Free E-Book Downloads

Support Swedenborg and Life! Enjoy our programming and want to help us produce more free videos, books, and other faith and spirituality content? Make a donation or become a member of the nonprofit Swedenborg Foundation!

About Swedenborg and Life

In a lighthearted and interactive live webcast format, host Curtis Childs from the Swedenborg Foundation and featured guests explore topics from Swedenborg’s eighteenth-century writings about his spiritual experiences and afterlife explorations and discuss how they relate to modern-day life and death.
View the entire Swedenborg and Life Playlist

About offTheLeftEye

When we wake up in heaven, Swedenborg tells us, angels roll a covering from off of our left eye so that we can see everything in a spiritual light. The offTheLeftEye YouTube channel uses an array of educational and entertaining video formats to look at life and death through an uplifting spiritual lens.
View our offTheLeftEye YouTube channel